All Questions
10 questions
0
votes
1
answer
256
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I am citing from a paper which confused the word "affective" and "affectionate", what should I do?
I understand that with minor spelling mistakes you use [sic] or just [brackets]. However, in this case, I think the author accidentally wrote the wrong word.
It looks odd to write affect[ionat]e and ...
9
votes
3
answers
2k
views
Why is it that sometimes in bibliography, DOI information is added?
When I'm casually browsing through bibliography section of preprints, sometimes I find that an author will also include the DOI information in the citation.
For example, I just picked a random Arxiv ...
2
votes
1
answer
146
views
Consecutive sentence citation in Chicago date-author style
I am writing a paper in which I repeat a newspaper article citation.
"The New York Times article discusses the introduction of the AFB mainframe computer (Stevens, 1984). During an interview with ...
3
votes
2
answers
375
views
Where should I place the citation in this sentence?
I have the following sentence, where the citation refers to the first part of the sentence. Because of how it appears in the formatting of my paper, and how it reads, I would like to have the citation ...
0
votes
1
answer
3k
views
What's the proper way to (APA) reference a settlement agreement?
I want to reference an exhibit from the following document (it's been split into separate parts):
Exhibits:
https://targetbreachsettlement.com/Portals/0/Documents/Settlement%20Agreement%20Exhibits....
3
votes
1
answer
607
views
References must be cited vs. need not be cited
In reviewing publishing guidelines prior to submission to a journal, it is listed that "References need not be cited in text." This is also listed in the style guide for the associated professional ...
4
votes
1
answer
477
views
Attributing Second-order Citations
Imagine that a paper by [Author A] has pulled together some literature on the misuse of a technology in context X. I now want to talk about misuse of the same technology but in context Y. When ...
2
votes
3
answers
789
views
Using reference as a subject in writing [duplicate]
Is it acceptable to use references as a subject in a sentence (in the context of academic writing, preferably in computer science)?
For example:
An extensive research has been done on eye capture ...
2
votes
1
answer
153
views
Does citation refer to paper or authors?
I imagine this question is asked before, but I could not find the answer.
This is the example sentence that got me wondering:
Gneiting and Ranjan (2013) generalize/generalizes these findings and ...
6
votes
2
answers
256
views
Citing a passage which includes added words by the translator?
I have the translation of a work in front of me and want to quote it. The translation reads:
"This is the right decision, and yet it is the wrong [one]"
The translator added the 'one' in brackets ...